REPORT: NFL Considering Significant Rule Change In Response To Continuous Accusations Of “Rigging” Games

REPORT: NFL Considering Significant Rule Change In Response To Continuous Accusations Of “Rigging” Games

Roger Goodell looking on (left). Buffalo Bills running a play vs. Kansas City Chiefs (right).
Roger Goodell and Bills vs. Chiefs (Photos via Getty Images and Twitter)

A significant NFL rule change is reportedly on the horizon, one that should greatly reduce the amount of officiating controversies that have plagued the league for years.

According to a report from Mark Maske of the Washington Post, a 2025 NFL rule change could feature the implementation of “an electronic system” to help measure first downs to help officials properly spot the football:

“The NFL will consider implementing an electronic system for measuring first downs during the 2025 season, according to a person familiar with the league’s planning on the matter.

The system, which the NFL has tested in game conditions in recent seasons, would involve the football being spotted manually by the on-field officials before the electronic system would determine whether that spot resulted in a first down. That system requires such a manual placement of the ball following a play and does not incorporate, for instance, the use of a chip in the football to determine whether a runner reached the first-down spot.”

Controversy erupted in the fourth quarter of the AFC Championship Game between the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs, when the officials marked Josh Allen’s 4th-and-inches QB sneak short of the first down:

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